The Moonsteel Crown by Stephen Deas - The First Three Chapters

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SETH “Pastries! Pastries! Lovely fresh pastries!” Seth waved his tray of stale pastries left over from last night’s kitchen in the Unruly Pig with increasingly forlorn hope. The Sulk had the city of Varr in its grasp like a butcher about to throttle a chicken, the air a crisp murderous cold that made Seth’s lungs ache. It was the middle of the afternoon and already the shadows from the brooding cliffs of the Kaveneth reached across the tournament field. The crowd had thinned to knots and clusters huddled around bonfires, where they bought roasted nuts and cups of hot, spiced wine as an excuse to stay near the warmth. It was the same every winter: the long silent smothering of cold, the three or four months spent desperately trying not to freeze. The rich and titled fled to Tarantor or Torpreah for the winter, where everyone could get on with their intrigues, plots and occasional stabbings without the added inconvenience of frostbite. Anyone too poor to get away was hiding stashes of firewood, bracing themselves in case they had to fight to the death to defend them. If you were poor, frankly, winter in Varr was a bit shit. How shit, Seth realised, was something he’d almost forgotten. Unfortunately, he looked set to be reminded. “Pastries! Pastries! Lovely fresh pastries!” He watched, envious of the fires. For the sake of appearances, one of the Imperial family usually held out until after Midwinter before they ran for warmer 9

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climes, but this year? Midwinter was still a month away and none of the bastards had stayed, not a single one. True, there had been more stabbings than usual – Seth had it on good authority that the emperor’s own brother had been murdered, possibly by a demon thing that walked through walls but more likely by his cousin. He’d make up a story, he decided. Spread it around and see if he could trade it for a few bits, how the Emperor’s cousin had disguised himself as a minstrel and then garrotted the prince with an enchanted lute-string, one laced with wyvern’s blood to keep the moon-priestesses from divining the truth. Something like that only better, because, frankly, that was about all that the lords and ladies of the Empire mattered to people like Seth. They could do as much plotting and stabbing as they liked, but when all the plotting and stabbing happened somewhere else, it meant not as many people showed up to the winter tournaments, which meant not as many people grumbling about the cold while they bought Seth’s pastries. “Pastries! Pastries!” He was wasting his time. Anyone with sense had already fled to shiver in the comfort of their own home. You didn’t expect the Emperor to stay, of course. Usually it was his brother, although even Seth had to grudgingly accept that being dead was a passable excuse for Prince Halvren not showing his face. The Emperor’s cousin, Prince Sharda, would have been a crowd-pleaser, if only for the frisson every time he opened his mouth in case he accidentally started a war. Actually, he’d heard rumours rumbling out of the Kaveneth that a war might be exactly what was coming. Seth had no idea why or whom the empire was planning to fight, exactly, since there really wasn’t anywhere left for it to go except across the sea and the Empire didn’t have much in the way of ships. Itself, probably. It had been more than three decades since the last war, after all, when Khrozus the Liberator – or Khrozus the Butcher, epithet dependent on your point of view – had seized the throne. There was the Emperor’s daughter, of course. Would people have come out to see the royal witch before she came of age or

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would they have stayed at home? Probably they’d have come in droves. Seth knew all too well how gawping and morbid fascination mostly got the better of common sense. “Pastries! Get your…” Oh, give up. Why? Somewhere better you could be? Shut up. Ma Fings would always give him a scrap of floor, but that meant squeezing in with Fings’ family and dealing with unwanted advances from probably at least two of Fings’ sisters. The alternative was begging a corner in the kitchens at the Unruly Pig, as he usually did, where Blackhand would inevitably want something in return. It would be the Pig, though, because the Pig had Myla, which at least meant a chance of some intelligent conversation, at least until she was drunk. They could agree on how everyone with a title in front of their name could stab each other until they were all dead and how the world would be a better place for it, and she’d share her wine, and probably let him sleep on her floor. He had time for Myla. Yes. Because she doesn’t mind you being a parasite. “Pastries! Get your pastries!” Oh, fuck off. They’d been stale before he started. Now they were either soggy and tooth-jarringly cold or actually frozen solid. He wasn’t sure which and wasn’t keen to find out. His feet and his fingers weren’t much better, either. His tattered boots were soaked through and starting to freeze. To add insult to injury, tantalising smells wafted from the Provisioners’ Guild tent. Fresh bread and hot sausage grease and spiced wine and stewed pears. They had a fire in there too, and canvas to keep in the warmth… “Pastries! Lovely fresh pastries…!” No one was even listening. Wasting my time. He looked around and spotted Fings slipping through the dwindling crowds. Put Fings in a crowd and all you had to do was stand back and watch while other people’s money made its way into his pockets with a will all of its own. Fings saw him looking, waved and started to head over, and Seth was half tempted to turn and run. Fings would inevitably leave him with a handful of bits,

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enough to buy a hot meal; and Seth knew he ought to be grateful, except Fings would say something trite and facile and cheery and stupid while he was at it, and Seth would have to bite his own tongue not to punch him in the face, which was probably just as well, because he’d only end up doing himself an injury. “Pastries! Pastries! Shit in a bun! Soggy crap with ice on it!” The light was fading, the air already freezing to his face. Anyone still here was desperate, broke and trying to sell something. And yet he didn’t turn and run, because Fings would give him money, and right now he had nothing, and the Sulk was barely starting. “Any of that worth eating? I’m starving.” Fings sidled up and gave him a nod. “Fresh as the day they were baked. Filled with exotic Southern spices,” said Seth absently. They stood side by side, looking over the archery field, still as white and pristine as it had been in the morning. “It wasn’t Sara in the kitchen last night, was it?” Fings frowned. “Last time I had anything of hers, it was a week before I was right again.” “Don’t think so.” Fings eyed the sad remains on Seth’s tray and helped himself. “Nice girl, but…” he shook his head. “I should have sold horse shit today.” Seth let Fings see the miserable handful of clipped bits that were his entire worldly wealth. “At least you can burn horse shit, if you let it dry. People pay for that, you know.” “If it was Sara in the kitchen last night, you probably were selling horse shit.” Fings offered his purse to Seth. “Help yourself.” Mostly it was clipped bits but there were a few crowns and… Seth reached in and pulled out a coin. Silver. Proper real silver. Somehow Fings, jammy bastard that he was, had landed a precious silver moon. Not an eighth or a quarter but a whole full-moon. Food for a month, that was, if you were careful. “Yeah.” Fings looked at the silver moon dubiously and wrinkled his nose. “Need to get rid of that.”

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“Where did you… How…?” “You ever get the feeling there’s a set of chains up there with your name on them?” Fings was looking down the river, up to the black bulk of the Kaveneth. “Some mage in the darkness, searching around, picking you out? Some guardsman on the ramparts, looking for you?” He took another pastry, “Not really, and that’s my livelihood you’re eating there.” Fings snatched back his purse and his silver moon, and tossed a couple of bits to Seth. “How’s the Murdering Bastard doing?” Seth shook his head. “Badly.” “Pity.” “Really?” The Murdering Bastard’s actual name was Sulfane. He’d shown up at the Unruly Pig a month ago and somehow had Blackhand wrapped around his little finger. He was, as they’d all found out, really quite good at shooting people with his bow. Just a bit… well, indiscriminate was probably about the nicest way to put it. Fings peered across the snow. “You keep banging on how there’s a war coming. Much better chance he’ll get killed if he’s off fighting in it rather than sitting around the Pig making our lives miserable.” Wars were things that happened to other people, as far as Fings was concerned. “Your wish may be granted. Blackhand wants me to forge a letter from some obscure lord no one’s ever heard of that’ll get your Murdering Bastard into the Emperor’s Guard.” “You can do that?” “Of course I can!” “You going to?” Seth caught Fings’ eye. When he was quite sure he had it, he dragged it to his tray of sodden pastries and then gave Fings a baleful look. “Blackhand asked nicely. What do you think?” What he could have been doing – what he should have been doing if his life hadn’t abruptly turned into an ash-heap six months ago – was sitting in the nice warm undercroft of a nice cosy temple in front of a nice hot fire. What he should have been doing was

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putting his feet up, toasting his toes, sipping warm spiced wine and chewing the fat with other senior novices and junior priests, discussing politics, theology, and which of the fat old Lightbringers who lorded it over them was the most likely to drop dead before winter ended. He missed that. Truth be told, he missed that a lot. “Don’t read the forbidden books.” What do you do? Read the forbidden books. “Don’t sneak into the forbidden crypt.” What do you do? Fuck about in the forbidden crypt. “Definitely don’t go into the forbidden catacombs.” What do you do? Not that they’d caught him on the last one. Of course, no one had said that all these things were forbidden, exactly. That was the galling part. A novice was simply supposed to know by some trick of divine telepathy, and then be a good little cleric and not do them. But you did know. You knew perfectly well. All he’d ever wanted was to serve the Sun. To understand the four Divinities. Yes, and if you’d managed to do as you were bloody well told for five minutes, maybe that’s exactly what would have happened, eh? What you wanted, you cretin, was a little patience. The end of a lifetime of dreams. There wasn’t even a shred of injustice to it. Warning after warning and he hadn’t stopped. Didn’t even know why, not really. He just… couldn’t. “I hope you’re fleecing him,” said Fings. Across the archery field, Sulfane was running from the stump of a tree. Seth watched as he vaulted onto a low platform and fired at one of the targets. He looked very determined. Dynamic. Intense. All good qualities a soldier was supposed to have, Seth supposed. He wasn’t sure where being as mad as a bag of spiders fitted, whether that was good or bad or whether it simply didn’t matter when you were standing in front of a thousand armoured horses bearing down on you at a gallop. Probably helped, didn’t it? “I said I hope you’re fleecing him.” “Blackhand? You must be joking.” “Not Blackhand you idiot. The Murdering Bastard.”

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Seth shrugged. “You want him gone, I want him gone, Blackhand wants him in the guard, that’s how we get rid of him.” He took a deep breath and let out a weary sigh. “You know Blackhand – like a pig rooting for truffles when he thinks there’s money about. Start of a new and profitable partnership he says, not that the likes of you or I will see our lives any sweeter.” He pulled the tray of pastries away as Fings snaffled another one. “You and I, brother, we have the same problem. We’re cowards, Fings. That’s what we are.”

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MYLA Myla crashed into the wall, felt wooden panels bend under the impact, and launched herself through the open door. Snow flew from her feet as the night air hit her. She felt the world close in, the ornamental gardens compressing into a dark tunnel, her at one end, Dinn and Arjay ahead, running down the last of the Spicers through the winter snow. “Don’t let him get away!” Wil was close behind with Brick and Dox. Somewhere, trailing at the back, was Blackhand. The Spicers weren’t going to get away. They were bolting for a gate which she and Dinn had tied shut ten minutes ago. It wouldn’t hold for long, but it wouldn’t need to. How to end this without it getting bloody? The old skinny one wouldn’t be a problem, nor the chubby one, but the other three… Two dark-skinned locals, all brawn and muscles, and a pale-skinned lad with a sword. Young, too. The sort of men who hadn’t yet found themselves on the wrong end of a fight. The trouble with men like that was that they didn’t understand when they were beaten. Made it hard to take them down without hurting them. The one with the sword. Him first. If she could take him out of the fight fast, the other two might falter. He was from the south. Deephaven, maybe, like her, or possibly Torpreah, so maybe he’d be willing to talk. He was taking coin from the Spicers, that was all. She could appeal to his sense as a mercenary. 16

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Of course, it didn’t help that Blackhand kept shouting out from the back, things like Gut them! and Maim the fuckers! and I want him skinned and his head on a fucking pike! Didn’t exactly set the best of tones for a negotiated surrender, that. She skidded around a corner, sliding on compacted snow towards a pair of rickety shacks as the Spicers dashed between them and down the waiting alley, straight towards Dinn’s tiedshut gate. Keep Chubby and let the others go? The old skinny one would take that and be grateful. Blackhand would be livid but he wouldn’t catch up in time to make a difference, and no one in their right mind argued with a sword-monk, even with a lapsed one who’d crashed out of training and drank too much. “Look out!” “Shit!” The shacks were collapsing, their flimsy walls exploding outward in a cloud of snow, and then suddenly there were two shambling figures standing in Myla’s path as Dinn and Arjay ran past. They stepped forward, blocking her way, and the right thing to do was to dance around them, past them, through them somehow, leave them to Wil and Dox and Brick while she stayed close to Dinn and Arjay, but there was something wrong about the way these two stood… Dead Men. She snatched a glance over her shoulder. More figures were emerging from the darkness around the edges of the garden. Three, four, maybe more. Like the two in front of her, they were slow and ponderous. She felt a shiver that wasn’t the cold and then a blaze of hungry righteous fury. Dead Men! “Myla!” Dead Men. Corpses denied the light of the sun or running water or open skies. Souls trapped in murdered bodies, bound to dead flesh until the Hungry Goddess took them for an eternity of anguish. Blasphemy and heresy, the sort that would summon a

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mayhem of wrathful priests and sword-monks to send the dead on their way and the living to a short, hard life in the Imperial mines, if ever they knew. Metal glinted from their hands. Someone had given them claws. Dead Men were easy to avoid if you could run away because they weren’t fast and didn’t last long in sunlight; but they were hard to take down in the dark if you didn’t have fire, and once they got hold of you, they didn’t let go… Fire… or blades made of Sunsteel. Sword-monk blades, in other words. Myla grinned and lashed out. The first cut struck a wrist, slicing through in a warm flare of light. The second skewered the nearest corpse in the face. The Sunsteel edge slid through him as though he was made of butter and snapped the tether to his soul. She glanced to the clear sky and the stars and the fat waxing moon and whispered a prayer. Fickle Lord Moon would get this one, or maybe the Ever-Shifting Mistress of the Stars would steal him. The second Dead Man barely noticed he was missing a hand. She took him from the side, both swords in deep, setting him free. This, more than anything, was what a sword-monk was for. “Myla!” Wil again. Behind her, Wil and Dox and Brick had scattered. Four more Dead Men were shambling around the garden, too slow to be dangerous; but down the alley, the Spicers had reached the gate. Beyond lay Spice Market Square, a flat field of trampled snow where they could scatter and run to the Longcoats, or the even the Sunguard of the temple. Dinn and Arjay were facing off against them, two on five, and the paleskinned man had a sword, a sword against sticks and knives… She ran faster. The snow in the alley was deep enough to crest the top of her boots, deep enough to make her clumsy and slow. The walls around her seemed blacker and taller than they had in daylight. It felt like a place to die, this alley. No one is going to die. Skinny crashed into the gate and bounced back with a curse and a clutch of his shoulder. “It’s tied!”

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“Then cut it, you moron!” Of all of them, Chubby was right to be scared. Blackhand wasn’t known for his mercy. “Cut it! Khrozus! He’ll kill the lot of us.” “Stop!” Myla shouted. “No one has to die here!” “Fuck you.” The pale-skinned man drew his sword. Dinn, never the brightest, swung his stick. The pale-skinned man ducked and stabbed him through the neck. “Dinn!” Arjay leapt forward as Dinn collapsed to his knees, clutching at the blood spraying from his throat. “I know you, don’t I?” The pale-skinned swordsman ignored Arjay, leaving her to the others, and came at Myla. “What were you saying about no one dying?” A sell-sword out of Deephaven, same as her. It wasn’t only his skin, it was the way he dressed, the way he held himself, the accent to his words. He came at her cautiously, sword glinting in the moonlight. A nice weapon, which meant money, either some rich-boy idiot slumming or else Chubby had paid for someone who actually knew what they were doing. The Spicers, like Blackhand’s Unrulys, mostly did their fighting by shouting and waving sticks at each other until someone backed down. Not this one though. Whoever he was, Dinn’s wasn’t the first life he’d ended. Skinny was at the gate, fumbling for a knife. Arjay was wrestling with the two other Spicers and Dinn was taking his time dying and making a right scene of it. Chubby’s eyes danced from her to the gate and back again. All he needed were however many precious seconds it took for Skinny to cut the rope… “Do I have to kill you?” she asked the swordsman. She hadn’t wanted to, running after them. But right now, Dinn’s blood fresh on the snow, listening to him thrash and gurgle out his last moments, she wasn’t so sure. The swordsman caught her eye. “You’re Myla.” He knew her name, did he? Then he knew what she was and he ought to be afraid. Trouble was, when she met his eye, she saw only murder.

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“Jeffa says hello.” Jeffa? What the fuck did Jeffa have to do with– He came at her fast, taking that moment of surprise, swinging high. Myla dodged inside the blow, expecting him to jump away to keep his distance, but he stepped in close instead and stabbed at her with a dirk hidden in his other hand. The pattern of Myla’s defence shattered. She improvised a parry and crashed into him, felt the mail under his coat, smelled hints of stale beer and cinnamon as breath exploded out of them both. He staggered but stayed up; Myla felt her thighs and knees strain and then the snow betrayed her. Instinct tucked her arms and head into her body, turning the fall into a roll. Kelm’s teeth! Watch your footing! Her face was full of snow, blinding her. It was in her hair, sliding down her neck, everywhere… “Don’t let the fuckers get away!” Blackhand’s shout rang through the alley. Myla scrabbled to her feet and shook off the snow, straight into a defensive form, expecting the swordsman to be on her at once… but Brick was running at him now, Brick who was all bravado and no skill just like the rest of them, Brick who was going to lose, badly and quickly… She liked Brick. Skinny was hacking at the rope around the gate, frozen fingers making a pig’s ear of it. Arjay was on the ground, the other two Spicer thugs apparently set on kicking her to death. She liked Arjay, too. Right then. She ran at the Spicers on Arjay first, flailing her swords, scattering them into Chubby and Skinny. A slash at Skinny cut his arm and sent the knife spinning out of his hand and then she whirled away as the swordsman lunged at Brick, stabbing him hard in the chest and sprawling him flat on his back. Jeffa says hello. What the fuck was Jeffa Hawat doing in Varr? The swordsman turned to face her. A heavy leather coat hid his physique and the mail underneath, but he was strong, she knew

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that now, and held his blade with a loose, easy grip. He knew what he was doing. The Dragon’s Tail, then. The form came by instinct, a flick at the tip of his sword to knock it aside, anticipating his recovery, feinting, blocking the inevitable counter and then a rush. He pushed her aside and stepped sharply back but neither was enough; as she ran past, she bashed him in the head and twisted and reached low, slashing the hook of her second sword at his retreating ankle. She pulled the cut at the last. She didn’t want to take his whole foot, only his enthusiasm. The form completed. She turned, expecting to see him on the ground, but no, he was coming at her, a snarling frenzy, poise gone, hammering blow after blow, pain and indignation welded into fury. She slipped into the Wall of Seventeen Claws but his sheer savagery shattered it. A swing came in hard enough to split her to the spine. When she blocked it, the shock sent a jolt of pain through her elbow. She felt something give in her shoulder. Speed, not your swords, will protect you. You must think only of attack, attack, attack. If you hesitate, you will fail. Sky Strikes the Earth. Begin. A turning step forward, right sword swinging low, snapping a cut to the groin. A sweep at his ankles and then she dropped. A flick of the wrist for extra speed, an unexpected rising cut as he flailed for balance and she caught him cleanly at the wrist, severing his hand. Dinn finally planted himself face down in the snow, red all around him, and stopped moving. Behind her, Brick was honking for air like a dying goose. Fuck you. A half-step forward, both swords in wild converging arcs. A moment of pure focus as the form completed into a deep stance, knee bent at a right angle, the other leg trailing behind her, swords spread wide to the stars… The swordsman’s head landed in the snow beside her. A rain of blood spattered over the alley, bright red on pristine white. Somewhere far away, Wil was shouting. She heard a shriek.

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He could have told you about Jeffa. Shit. The head stared up at her from the snow. Eyes wide and open. She felt her old sword-mistress looking on. Bitter, mistrustful and deadly Tasahre. Sword-monks exist to put down abominations. No hesitation, no doubt, no second chances. An ordinary man? A single look should be all it takes. Wil and Dox barged past, brandishing blades at the remaining Spicers, forcing them away from Arjay. Chubby was shouting at them to fight, and Skinny too, and wasn’t three on three fair odds? The other Spicers were all just staring at her. A single look should be all it takes. Fine. She met their eyes, one by one, and held out her swords, dripping with blood. One by one, they dropped their weapons to the snow. Jeffa says hello. They’d found her, then. They’d followed her all this way and they’d found her, and she’d let anger get in the way of sense again, and now someone else was dead. I need a drink. Dox helped Arjay to her feet. Brick was on all fours and puking but at least he wasn’t vomiting blood. Wil went for Chubby. Chubby lunged and Wil grabbed his wrist, twisted, took his knife off him, and that was that. Skinny didn’t even resist, too busy staring at the headless corpse and all the dark blood-soaked snow. By the time Blackhand caught up, Arjay and Dox had Skinny and the other two Spicers backed against the gate. Wil had Chubby on his knees. Blackhand took it all in, the bloody snow, Dinn with his throat ripped open, the corpse of the sell-sword and his severed head. “Dead Men and a sell-sword, eh?” He turned to Chubby. “I hope they cost you a fortune, you unwanted dose of cock-rot.” He spat, then nodded to Wil. “Take him back to the house.” “What about these three?” asked Arjay, as Dox and Wil dragged Chubby away. She wasn’t standing quite right after the kicking she’d taken.

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Blackhand slapped her on the shoulder, hard enough that she winced. “Two of theirs for one of mine seems fair. Pick one and gut him. The other two get to live.” He headed away, Brick limping after him. The two Spicer thugs pushed Skinny forward. Skinny dropped to his knees, wailing for mercy, while the others eyed Myla. For a few long seconds, they all stared at each other. In the end, Arjay shook her head. She went to the gate, cut Dinn’s rope and threw it open. “Fuck off, the lot of you. Don’t ever come back.” Arjay limped away, giving them space, and it still took half a dozen heartbeats before the first of them moved, never taking his eyes from Myla until he was at the gate. When he turned and ran and nothing bad happened, the other two followed quick enough. Arjay flashed Myla a glare, then a glance at the dead sell-sword. Your mess. You clean it up. She headed after Blackhand. Alone, Myla sank against the alley wall. Where do I run to now? She had no idea. Didn’t want to think about it. She was still sitting there, not thinking about it, when a scream from inside the house harrowed the night. Not long after, the Unrulys came back out. Blackhand looked pleased with himself. Wil looked stony. “…and when that pig-faced offal-bucket in Tombland comes banging on the door, tell him to piss off back to selling sheep-shit in the Dung Markets. Everyone gets the message, right? If you want a piece of the Spice Market, you deal with the Unrulys or they fucking cut your bits off! Ain’t that right?” He clapped Myla on the shoulder as he passed and then walked on as though she wasn’t there, stepping over the headless corpse. “You want us to do something about Dinn?” asked Dox. “No, leave him for the Longcoats… Of course I bloody want you to do something about him, you cretin! Drop him in the river. The other idiot, too. Myla, Wil, deal with it. Arjay, you go with them. Make sure it’s done right.” Wil growled something and shot a look at Myla. She knew

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exactly why he looked at her the way he did, why they all looked at her that way, a bit of fear, a bit of scorn, a bit of envy, a bit of contempt. They looked at her that way because she was a monster. I really need a drink. Arjay stretched, trying to get the kinks out of her spine. “Dinn wasn’t anyone’s fault, Wil.” She cocked her head at Myla. Let’s go. Myla turned away. “Not yet. Something I need to do.” The other Dead Men hadn’t wandered far. She put them down one by one. Holy work, God’s work, but she took no joy from it. All she saw was the severed head of the swordsman from Deephaven, looking up at her from the snow, and all she heard was his voice. Jeffa says hello. Shit.

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3

FINGS Fings stood with Seth on the edge of the tournament field, watching the Murdering Bastard shoot stuff. If anyone had bothered to ask, he would have said that the whole business with the Spicers had started with Sulfane. The Spice Market was Fings’ home: he’d grown up in its streets and he felt the ebb and flow of its tensions as though they were his blood. For the last five years, since Blackhand had come back to Varr, the Unrulys had kept Haberdashers and the Western Spice Market in line, with the usual carrot and stick of bribes and beatings, while in the Eastern Market, the Spicers had done the same. And yes, there was the blurry space between where people occasionally got a kicking, and yes, now and then things got out of hand and someone ended up dead, but on the whole it worked. On the whole, both sides had kept the peace. Right up until the moment the Murdering Bastard had walked in. Blackhand, naturally, claimed the Spicers had started it. Mostly, the Unrulys pretended to believe him: he was Black Alarand, after all, the man who’d taken down the Mage of Tombland and survived, the leader who’d seen them through bad times and made them good again, and that counted for a lot. The senior Unrulys – Wil, Arjay, Dinn, even Fings on a good day – would have followed Blackhand into a burning warehouse given half a reason. But there was another before that Fings still remembered, a before when Fings 25

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and Seth had been somewhere between boys and men, when the Mage of Tombland had had half the city underworld under the shadow of his bone-toothed whip, and Black Alarand had been his most murderous bastard lieutenant. That was the thing: Fings had been there when the Mage of Tombland fell. He was never quite sure what Blackhand’s plan had been for afterwards, but he was pretty sure that what it hadn’t been was to flee the city for two years leaving mayhem in his wake while everyone else dropped dead like flies. Blackhand had come back – eventually – and settled himself in the Unruly Pig after the previous owner mysteriously left the city in an extreme hurry. He’d claimed Haberdashers and the Spice Market and generally sorted out the mess he’d made. And yes, he’d had some trouble for a while with the up-and-coming Spicers – beatings and places mysteriously catching fire and people showing up dead, that sort of thing – but eventually they’d worked it out and the world had settled into its new order. And now Sulfane was littering the place with corpses again, and Blackhand held his leash, and Fings, frankly, wanted nothing to do with it. He felt a tug on his sleeve. A dwarfish old man with no teeth grinned up at him. “Get lost,” snapped Seth. The old man shoved a hand into a rotten sack slung over his shoulder and pulled out a chicken’s foot on a string. “Lucky charm?” He thrust it at Fings and then at Seth, and nodded at the tray of pastries. “Swap?” he said, hopefully. “Fuck off,” said Seth. The old man gave him a sour look and turned to leave. Fings stopped him. “What do they do?” he asked. “Do?” The old man squinted at him, full of suspicion. Seth rolled his eyes. “Fuck’s sake, Fings, don’t encourage him.” “A lot of people might come and sell you something for your health or something for…” the old man pointed at Fings’ crotch, “down there, if you get what I’m saying. But these are special, these are. Real special.”

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He eyed Fings carefully as he spoke. Seth flapped a hand at the old man’s onion-breath. “Get lost, will you?” “Used to work in the offal trade.” The old man pointed down the river to the Kaveneth. “Once a week they’d send me up there.” Fings snapped to attention. “The Guild? No! Really?” “No,” said Seth. “Not really. Now fuck off.” The old man reached out his hand. On the back of it was a tattoo, old and faded and a bit smudged but still clear for all to see. The sign of the Guild. “Was years ago, back when the Emperor, Sun bless him, was a year on the throne and the Guild was new.” The old man sidled closer to whisper in Fings’ ear. “I watched them good, I did. Learned a trick or two. What do you think of that?” “What I think is that if some mage taught you any tricks at all, you wouldn’t be here trying to flog the lopped-off foot of a dead chicken to an idiot,” snapped Seth. “Now would you please piss off! The grown-ups are trying to have a conversation.” Fings thought about this. He would have been the first to admit, if anyone had bothered to ask, that he had a bit of a thing for other people’s money. No one ever did ask, because everyone already knew, but if there was one thing that mattered to Fings even more, it was keeping fortune on his side. Luck, if you like. With a bit of luck watching his back, he could deal with most things, because most things he could understand in a basic sort of way, and if they were sharp or angry then you ran away, and he was good at running away. Mages were different, though. You couldn’t run from a mage. Mages didn’t obey the rules of luck, and that made them terrifying. He took the old man by the shoulders, led him a couple of steps away and looked him up and down. “I thought only mages could go into the Guild! I thought everyone else just dissolves into dust!” A look of hastily-suppressed surprise flashed across the old man’s face. “Y… Yes! That’s right!” “No, it isn’t,” called Seth. “And I can still hear you.” The old man was eagerly offering up his chicken foot, holding out his other hand for a coin or two in return. Seth came over and roughly pushed him away.

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“I’ve been into the bloody Guild.” He made a show of patting himself down. “Nope. Still a coherent corporeal entity, apparently. Not made of dust.” Fings stepped around Seth, his attention still on the old man. Poor Seth, he just didn’t understand how fortune worked. “You’ve got a charm that protects you from mages?” He glanced to the ramparts of the Kaveneth. Anything that protected you from mages had to be worth something. “Gods strike me down if I’m a liar,” said the old man, watching him closely. “Yes, please, gods,” Seth cast his eyes to the heavens. “Any one of you, any time. At your own pace. Oh, wait, you don’t listen to us mere mortals, do you? Not really.” The old man pulled another chicken foot from his satchel. He tied it to a length of fraying string and looped it around Fings’ neck. “This was so I could do my work, but I don’t do that no more. This will protect you from all manner of sorcery!” Fings pulled out his purse. It would be a relief to have some protection… “Fings!” Seth caught his hand. “Oh, for the love of… It’s like talking to a brick fucking wall.” He moved between them, pointedly blocking the old man. “They gave him a mage-charm and then what? Forgot to take it back? Fings, that is a chicken foot. If it had even one iota of arcane mystery invested in it, this skinny tit would not be selling it. It isn’t even lucky, and I know that because if it was lucky, it would still be attached to its original fucking owner, wouldn’t it? You want a lopped-off chicken’s foot, I’ll get you one myself. Fresh from the Teahouse kitchens. A right bloody charm-factory it is in there on poultry night.” The old man shot Seth a murderous look. He sighed theatrically. “Sulk’s come early. It’s a sign, isn’t it? You never know when a mage might–” “Fuck’s sake!” Seth rounded on the old man. “Look… Alright, you win. Take a pastry and then fuck off!” The old man helped himself to a pastry. He ate it and made a

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face. “Not very good, are they,” he said, and then grabbed another. Fings handed over his silver moon. The old man gaped, gaped a bit more, and then ran away. “You… You…!” Seth seemed to be having a problem with his words. “Brother!” Fings soothed. “Inside the Guild, day after day, week after week?” Was a shame that a man who’d once braved the Guild and risked all manner of misfortune should be reduced to selling his one and only treasure for firewood. “You believed that crap?” Fings wagged a knowing finger. “He had the mark! The mark of the Guild!” “What, that mess on the back on the back of his hand?” Now Seth looked like he had a problem with his teeth. “He drew that himself. This morning.” “No!” “Fings! Professional forger here. Trust me on this.” “No one would dare!” Fings shook his head. “The mages would know! Unless…” An understanding dawned on him then, proof that he was right! “Unless he had a charm that stopped them!” Yes! “See! That shows it works!” “What?” “This must be one of the most… big… of charms. It must be like the king of charms.” “The most… big of charms?” Seth didn’t look well. Fings pulled him close. “Besides,” he whispered. “I had to get rid of that silver moon, right? It was cursed.” Seth jerked away. “Cursed? What do you mean cursed?” “Was old. Still got the head of old Emperor Khrozus on it, Sun bless him, and he’s dead. Been bothering me all afternoon, wandering around carrying the image of a dead man. I mean, you know how unlucky that is! And I didn’t want to just toss it because, you know, silver, right? But a dead man’s face carved on silver? And a moon, a whole full-moon… Something bad was bound to happen.”

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“Something bad just did happen!” “Feel a bit guilty giving it to him, really.” Now Seth was clenching his jaw like something hurt. “Next time you get an unlucky coin that’s made of silver, I’ll look after it, alright?” “But then–” “Priest tricks,” hissed Seth. “We know how to protect ourselves.” Fings tried a smile. “After this thing Blackhand’s got going, none of us are going to go hungry this winter.” He tossed some coins to Seth, because Seth was Seth, and because they’d been as good as brothers since they were eight years old, and because it was only to be expected that Seth was still a bit out of sorts from the whole business of getting thrown out of the priesthood, and anyway, a part of him was still dazzled with wonder. “A charm against mages! How about that! Maybe the Emperor has a charm like this, too, Sun bless him.” “Fings… Go away now.” “But–” “The Emperor is a mage, Fings! Why would he need one?” Fings spotted Sulfane heading towards them, a big fat grin all over his face. Time to go. He turned away. “Tell the Murdering Bastard I’ll be there later.” Not that he wanted to help Sulfane, but it would be good to get away from Longcoats accidentally tripping over and impaling themselves on arrows or whatever other nonsense Blackhand was peddling these days. As he walked, he touched a finger to his new charm and wondered if it worked on Dead Men, too. There were always more Dead Men during the winter when people with nowhere else to go curled up and quietly died of the cold. Now and then you’d meet one in the dark, some fellow shambling along an alley towards you, and you wouldn’t know whether it was a Dead Man or just some drunk. But no, the Dead Men were something to do with the gods, which was why Seth knew how to make them stop. They were nothing to fear as long as you knew how to run away, and when

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it came to running away, Fings was a champion. Mages, on the other hand… Mages were something else, which was why swordmonks got all pissy about them, and quite right too. He shivered, tucked his charm inside his shirt where it would be safe, and kept walking.

A couple of hours later, long after the city had slumped into darkness, he rounded the corner into Neckbreaker Yard and stopped to have a good look around. Apart from running away, the other thing he was good at was stealing things, but the trouble with being good at stealing things and being good at running away, he’d noticed, was that people tended to blame you for everything that went missing even when you had nothing to do with it. Example: Fings reckoned it surely should have been obvious that he hadn’t stolen Red Kaiala’s stash of silver, because it should have been obvious that he wasn’t stupid enough to piss where he slept… and yet all he’d been hearing these last few days was how Red was going to slit him from gut to gizzard if he didn’t hand it all back, which was ridiculous when he obviously didn’t have it in the first place! Admittedly, he had borrowed a couple of old books she’d been sitting on, but those had been for Seth, and Red didn’t even read, so it wasn’t like she’d needed them, and now here she was blaming him for everything, just because some other stuff had gone missing about the same time. It was outrageously unjust, but Red had enough clout in the Neckbreakers for it to be a problem, so here he was, trying to make peace. The Neckbreakers playing dice in the middle of the yard stopped when they saw him and got to their feet. They moved slow and easy, hands drifting to the hilts of their knives. They didn’t do anything more because Fings wasn’t stupid enough to get so close that he couldn’t run, and if he ran then they wouldn’t catch him, and they all knew it because they’d all grown up together. “Necky. Toes.” Fings gave them each a nod. They’d been friends, once. Still were, mostly. Him and Toes had run together. Was

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Fings who’d got him his name. Fings and Toes. Made everyone laugh and so it stuck. They both owed him, little favours done over the years, not big but not nothing either. Place they’d grown up, favours were often the only currency there was, which meant people remembered and kept tally. Maybe that was why Toes and Necky weren’t doing anything more than standing there. “Red’s put a quarter-moon on you, Fings,” said Toes. “You should know that.” Fings touched the chicken foot hanging around his neck. Could have paid off the bounty if he’d kept that silver moon. Passed the bad luck to Red. Would that have made them square? Probably not. “I’ve come to settle.” Fings stooped, never taking his eyes off them, and put a purse on the ground. “It’s everything I got.” Everything he could spare. “You take that to Red. Tell her it’s for the books and that I didn’t touch her silver. If that’s not enough to make things good, she can call on the Pig and put in a grievance to Blackhand. Happy to talk.” Happy to talk in the safety of the Pig, at least, because the Neckbreakers paid their dues to Blackhand just like everyone else, and Red certainly did know better than to piss where she slept. He left the purse and backed away. It wouldn’t be enough, not even close, but maybe it would buy him the time to do whatever this job was that the Murdering Bastard said was going to make them all rich.

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